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Original Articles

Deforestation of montane cloud forest in the Central Highlands of Guatemala: contributing factors and implications for sustainability in Q’eqchi’ communities

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Pages 201-212 | Received 12 Sep 2014, Accepted 10 Dec 2014, Published online: 27 Jan 2015
 

Abstract

Cloud forest in the Central Highlands of Guatemala provides important ecosystem services for the Q’eqchi’ Maya but has been disappearing at an increasing rate in recent decades. This research documents changes in cloud forest cover, explores some contributing factors to deforestation, and considers forest preservation and food security implications for Q’eqchi’ communities. We used a transdisciplinary framework that synthesized remote sensing/GIS analysis of land cover change, focus group dialogs, and surveys. Expansion of subsistence agriculture is a key proximate cause of cloud forest removal, followed by extraction of fuelwood and larger-scale logging operations. Predisposing environmental factors such as rugged topography, steep slopes, and poor soils contribute to low agricultural productivity that contributes to increased conversion of forest to agricultural land. The key underlying driving forces for deforestation locally are population growth and subdivision of land. Population growth is increasing the demand for agricultural land and, as a result, the Q’eqchi’ clear the forest to meet the need for increased food production. Furthermore, population growth is driving subdivision of land, decreasing fallow periods, and putting additional strain on poor soils, all of which exacerbate land degradation. Given the increase in population in the region, food production must be improved on existing agricultural land to avoid the need to put more land into production to meet food requirements. Thus, efforts to sustainably increase agricultural productivity are fundamental to efforts to conserve the cloud forest and to safeguard essential ecosystem services.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Community Cloud Forest Conservation for their dedication to cloud forest conservation and for their support and hard work to facilitate this study. We would also like to thank several individuals who assisted with fieldwork: David Chambers, Adam Hager, and Carl Larsen. Funding for fieldwork was assisted by the Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Purdue University, and through a US Borlaug Fellowship awarded by the Purdue Center for Global Food Security. Several communities also dedicated a great deal of time and effort into the study, and for this we are deeply grateful.

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